MIA: ETOL Writers: Susan Green
Susan Green Archive
Works:
Submits Two Amendments to Resolution, 20 June 1939
To See or Not to See, 20 May 1940 (film reviews)
To See or Not to See, 27 May 1940 (film reviews)
To See or Not to See, 10 June 1940 (film reviews)
Labor Action Correspondent Talks to Kearny Men, Finds Strike Sentiment Strong, 17 June 1940
To See or Not to See, 24 June 1940 (film reviews)
The Better Half: The “First Lady of the Land” – Lieutenant in Jingo Brigade, 1 July 1940
Wall St. Picks Its Republican Nominees: McNary, 8 July 1940
To See or Not to See, 8 July 1940 (film reviews)
The Better Half, 15 July 1940 (column)
Packard “Patriots” Kick, Government Hastens to Guarantee War Profits, 22 July 1940
To See or Not to See, 22 July 1940 (film reviews)
Of Special Interest to Women, 29 July 1940 (column)
To See or Not to See, 5 August 1940 (film reviews)
Of Special Interest to Women, 12 August 1940 (column)
To See or Not to See, 19 August 1940 (film reviews)
Sound and Fury Abound – Aid Is Scant, 19 August 1940
Of Special Interest to Women, 26 August 1940 (column)
To See or Not to See, 9 September 1940 (film reviews)
Out of the Long Ago Comes a Record of Roosevelt’s Position on Conscription, 16 September 1940
Of Special Interest to Women, 16 September 1940 (column)
Leviton Workers Say They’ve Had Enough, 23 September 1940
To See or Not to See, 23 September 1940 (film reviews)
Of Special Interest to Women, 30 September 1940 (column)
20,000 Organized Electricians Behind Leviton Strikers, 30 September 1940
Leviton Strike Case Before Labor Board, 7 October 1940
To See or Not to See, 7 October 1940 (film reviews)
Of Special Interest to Women, 14 October 1940 (column)
Union Ready For Long Leviton Fight, 14 October 1940
Of Special Interest to Women, 28 October 1940 (column)
Leviton Boss Still Stalling Despite Union Vote, 4 November 1940
Jobless Protest Abuses of Food Stamp Plan, 11 November 1940
To See or Not to See, 11 November 1940 (film reviews)
Of Special Interest to Women, 18 November 1940 (column)
To See or Not to See, 25 November 1940 (film reviews)
Of Special Interest to Women – At the CIO Convention, 2 December 1940 (column)
Of Special Interest to Women, 9 December 1940 (column)
To See or Not to See, 16 December 1940 (film reviews)
Labor Serfdom Is NAM Goal, 23 December 1940
Wages and the Last War, 30 December 1940
To See or Not to See, 6 January 1941 (film reviews)
Of Special Interest to Women, 13 January 1941 (column)
Relief That Does Not Relieve – New York City Chisels on Relief Funds, 20 January 1941
To See or Not to See, 20 January 1941 (film reviews)
Over One Million British Workers Demand More Pay, 27 January 1941
Slave Markets, 3 February 1941
Capitalist Lies Won’t Help Them, 10 February 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 17 February 1941 (column)
You Pay More Now – For Less Meat: War Speculation a Bonanza to Food Profiteers, 17 February 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 24 February 1941 (column)
The Miners Make “Formidable” Demands: An Exposé of Bituminous Mine Conditions, 24 March 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 24 March 1941 (column)
“National Defense” Used to Break ALCOA Strike, 31 March 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 31 March 1941 (column)
Whom Do They Represent? “Democracy” on Parade – Labor Haters Trot Out Their Bills, 7 April 1941
Sauce for Big Business Is ..., 14 April 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 21 April 1941 (column)
A May Day Message to Working Women, 28 April 1941
What’s New on National Strike Front?, 28 April 1941
Textile Union Leaders Hitch Convention to War Chariot, 5 May 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 12 May 1941 (column)
Put the Bosses on Ice; Labor Needs No ‘Cooling’, 12 May 1941
City Officials Answer TWU Demands with Threats, Lies, 19 May 1941
Social Gains Are on Way Out – IF Labor Permits, 26 May 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 2 June 1941 (column)
Tremendous Transport Rally Gives City Union Busters Something to Think About, 2 June 1941
The Hood, the Bismarck – and Housing, 9 June 1941
TWU Battles with Facts against Fakes, 9 June 1941
Very Special Interest to Women, 16 June 1941 (column)
Of Special Interest to Women, 30 June 1941 (column)
Speed-Up in War Production Kicks Safety Out of Window, 30 June 1941
TWU Retreats Under Many-Sided Pressure, 7 July 1941
The American People Do Not Want War! They Should Have the Right to Say So!, 14 July 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 14 July 1941 (column)
Russia’s Role in the War, 28 July 1941
What Is This War All About? 28 July 1941
8,000 Electrical Workers Strike at Con-Edison, 4 August 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 4 August 1941 (column)
Senator Wheeler: False Crusader, 11 August 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 18 August 1941 (column)
A Lesson on “Peace” Points: 8 Plus 4 Equals 0, 25 August 1941
A Stink in the Garden of the “Little Flower”, 25 August 1941
Municipal Merry-Go-Round, 1 September 1941 (column)
Municipal Merry-Go-Round, 8 September 1941 (column)
“Soldiers of Destiny” – At $21 a Month, 15 September 1941
Municipal Merry-Go-Round, 22 September 1941 (column)
Nazis Fix Martial Law on Norway, 22 September 1941
Ceilings? On Houses, Yes! On Wages, NO!, 29 September 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 29 September 1941 (column)
Transit Union Convention Marks Two Years of Growth, 6 October 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 13 October 1941 (column)
Municipal Merry-Go-Round, 20 October 1941 (column)
Of Special Interest to Women, 20 October 1941 (column)
Municipal Merry-Go-Round, 27 October 1941 (column)
Municipal Merry-Go-Round, 3 November 1941 (column)
A Living Wage for the War-Made Unemployed, 17 November 1941
Of Special Interest to Women, 24 November 1941 (column)
Milk Is a Good Food, But Can You Afford It?, 1 December 1941
War Is Good Business for Business, 1 December 1941 (book review)
Of Special Interest to Women, 8 December 1941 (column)
American Bosses Plan Vicious Anti-Labor Drive, 15 December 1941
Labor Can’t Be Content with Sitting on Status Quo, 15 December 1941
A Tragic Story of Life Down South America, 22 December 1941 (book review)
Of Special Interest to Women, 29 December 1941 (column)
Mr. Churchill Pulls a Fast One, 5 January 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 12 January 1942 (column)
The Little Man Keeps Getting Littler, 19 January 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 26 January 1942 (column)
Capitalism Presents Its Post-War Utopias – Pie in the Sky When You Die, 2 February 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 9 February 1942 (column)
Capitalism Plans for the Post-War World: A Brilliant Example of Utter Futility, 16 February 1942
Race Bias Exposed at Government Hearing, 23 February 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 2 March 1942 (column)
Anglo-American Economic Pact Solves No Problems – Present or Future, 9 March 1942
You Have to Be Rich to Know How to Avoid Paying Your Income Taxes, 16 March 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 23 March 1942 (column)
Of Special Interest to Women, 5 April 1942 (column)
Who’s Who in U.S. Fascists, 5 April 1942 (series)
Why Fascists Use Anti-Semitic Lies, 12 April 1942 (series)
Shipyard Workers Meet, 19 April 1942
U.S. Fascists Aim Blows at Labor, 19 April 1942 (series)
Here’s How to Smash Fascists, 26 April 1942 (series)
Some Additional Notes and Comments on the Shipyard Workers Convention, 26 April 1942
Women in War Industries, May 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 4 May 1942 (column)
Why Should Labor Be the Tail to the Capitalist Kite?, 4 May 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 11 May 1942 (column)
What Kearny Union Got from “Membership Maintenance”, 18 May 1942
Native Land – A Portrait of Labor’s Fight, 25 May 1942 (film review)
Of Special Interest to Women, 25 May 1942 (column)
Of Special Interest to Women, 8 June 1942 (column)
Peonage in the Shadow of the Rockies, 8 June 1942
Is There Democracy in Britain’s Army?, 15 June 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 15 June 1942 (column)
The Annihilation of Lidice, 22 June 1942
Dependents Get Handout, 22 June 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 29 June 1942 (column)
Sugar, Sugar Everywhere But Only a Half Pound to Eat, 29 June 1942
Wheels of Industry Which Never Ran for the People, 6 July 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 13 July 1942 (column)
Prices Rise as OPA Hikes “Ceiling” on Vital Foods, 13 July 1942
Auto Workers Union Threatens Rent Strike in Detroit Area!, 20 July 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 27 July 1942 (column)
Can the Boss System Plan Production? 10 August 1942
ALP Circus Antics Indicate Need of an Independent Party of Labor, 31 August 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 31 August 1942 (column)
Can the Boss System Plan Production?, 7 September 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 14 September 1942 (column)
Basis of Jewish Question, 19 October 1942
Some News and Comment on the Election Campaign, 26 October 1942 (column)
Some News and Comment on the Election Campaign, 2 November 1942 (column)
A Brooklyn Reader Disagrees (letter) – Susan Green Answers ... (reply), 16 November 1942
The Housewife Gets Gypped on Food Prices!, 16 November 1942
Congress Filibuster Threatens to Kill Anti-Poll Tax Bill, 23 November 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 30 November 1942 (column)
Senate Upholds Poll Tax!, 30 November 1942
EXTRA! OPA Keeps Prices Down – But Not Prices of Food and Clothing, 14 December 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 21 December 1942 (column)
For Price Control and Rationing by Worker-Farmer Committees, 28 December 1942
Of Special Interest to Women, 28 December 1942 (column)
LaGuardia Treats Transit Workers of New York as Second-Class Citizens, 4 January 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 1 February 1943 (column)
Now Is the Time to Form a Labor Party!, 15 February 1943
What Is a Workers’ Government?, March/April 1943 (series)
Of Special Interest to Women, 8 March 1943 (column)
Anti-Labor Gang Behind Scare on “Absenteeism”, 15 March 1943
A Story with a Double Moral, 22 March 1943
Protest Ehrlich-Alter Murder, 5 April 1943
We Can Win, We Shall Win!, 26 April 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 3 May 1943 (column)
The WLB – Labor Leaders Must Get Off the Board!, 17 May 1943
Mr. Davies – Lawyer and Whitewasher, 24 May 1943
A Brief Review, June 1943 (book review)
OPA “Rolls Back” Food Prices to a 75% Increase, 7 June 1943
Int’l Food Conference a Fiasco, 14 June 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 21 June 1943 (column)
Exposing More Merchants of Death – Shipowners’ Cost-Plus Piles Up, 5 July 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 12 July 1943 (column)
Job Worry Behind the Race Problem, 19 July 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 2 August 1943 (column)
Henry Ford versus Karl Marx, 9 August 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 23 August 1943 (column)
20 Million Will Be Jobless, 30 August 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 6 September 1943 (column)
23,500,000 Will Be Jobless, 6 September 1943
A Genuine Socialist Program for Post-War Unemployment, 13 September 1943
To the Wives of Union Men! What the Labor Movement Signifies, 20 September 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 11 October 1943 (column)
A Phoney “Era of the Common Man”, 18 October 1943
Pressing Union Problems on Floor at 63rd Annual Meeting of AFL, 25 October 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 1 November 1943 (column)
AFL and CIO Conventions Fumble Problem of Unionizing Women, 22 November 1943
Of Special Interest to Women, 6 December 1943 (column)
The Thirty-Hour Week, 13 December 1943
We’re Getting Shoddy for Our Money, 20 December 1943
American Capitalists Embrace Fascism, 27 December 1943
Roosevelt Joins the Chorus; “New Deal” Is Outmoded, 3 January 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 10 January 1944 (column)
Labor Must Organize the Fight Against Anti-Semitism, 17 January 1944
CIO-AFL Assail Labor Draft Bill; Fight Efforts to Cripple Unions, 24 January 1944
Labor Must Ditch War Labor Board to Save Its Skin, 31 January 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 31 January 1944 (column)
Cost of Living Up 43.5% – Wages Are Frozen at 15%, 7 February 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 14 February 1944 (column)
Destroy Black Market!, 6 March 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 6 March 1944 (column)
Stalin Recognizes the Fascist Badoglio! 20 March 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 3 April 1944 (column)
Will Capitalism Provide Jobs for All Workers? 10 April 1944
Labor Fights Union-Busting Laws, 10 April 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 24 April 1944 (column)
Meet Mrs. Neame – Working Woman, 1 May 1944
Billions for Big Business – Nothing for Labor in Senate Bill, 15 May 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 5 June 1944 (column)
Extermination of German People – Allied Plan, 25 September 1944
Militants Make Strong Bid at URW Convention, 2 October 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 23 October 1944 (column)
Ship Convention Politics, 23 October 1944
Election of Roosevelt No Guarantee of Security for American Labor, 27 November 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 4 December 1944 (column)
Workers’ Control Means Plenty For All, 11 December 1944
High Wage Myth: 40% Get Under 65¢ Hourly, 18 December 1944
Of Special Interest to Women, 1 January 1945 (column)
UAW Breaks Pledge – Supports Strike of Ward Workers, 8 January 1945
Reasons Given by FDR for National Service Are False, 15 January 1945
Three News Items and Their Meaning, 22 January 1945
On the Labor Front – CIO White Collar Workers Program, 29 January 1945
Of Special Interest to Women, 26 February 1945 (column)
The Ordeal Depicts Slavery of Russian Workers, 16 April 1945 (book review)
Behind the Attack on W.L. White’s Book on Russia, 23 April 1945 (book review)
A May Day Message on Socialism for Working Class Women, 30 April 1945
The German Workers Are Not Guilty, 7 May 1945
The Collapse of Germany and Italy, 14 May 1945
Of Special Interest to Women, 28 May 1945 (column)
Capitalist Reconversion to Unemployment, 11 June 1945
Cutbacks, Layoffs, But No Raise in Pay Yet! 18 June 1945
China: The Struggle Between Chiang and the Communists, 25 June 1945
Conscription – For a New World War, For Anti-Labor Use, 2 July 1945
Harlem and the Mayoralty Election, 9 July 1945
Rankin’s Union-Busting Bill, 30 July 1945
Ship Workers and Reconversion, 30 July 1945
Churchill, Tory Imperialist, 13 August 1945
Civil Life in Wartime Germany, A Book Review, 27 August 1945
Quit Stalling and Provide the Jobs! 3 September 1945
Of Special Interest to Women, 10 September 1945 (column)
Truman’s Plan – Or Ours? 17 September 1945
Labor Is on the March to Make Up War Losses! 8 October 1945
The Case for the 30% Wage Increase, 5 November 1945
For a People’s Referendum on Compulsory Military Training! 12 November 1945
Where Does Argentine Labor Stand? 19 November 1945
All-Out Support to UAW Against the Auto Barons, 26 November 1945
Economic Basis of the Black Market, December 1945
GM Can’t Break Union Say Linden Auto Strikers, 3 December 1945
Wallace and Jobs for All, 17 December 1945
Prices Up; Ceilings in Jeopardy, 24 December 1945
What’s Wrong with the Labor Party’s Nationalization, 31 December 1945
Peron’s New Bid for Labor Support, 7 January 1946
Conservatives Win in Ship Convention, 21 January 1946
Explains Argentine Article Sentence (letter), 4 February 1946
Of Special Interest to Women (column), 11 February 1946
Bosses, Mayor Combine Against Tug Strikers, 18 February 1946
Korea: Victim of the War for “Liberation”, 25 February 1946
Corporations on Strike for High Prices, 4 March 1946
Wheat Is Burned as 500 Million People Face Starvation, 18 March 1946
GM Program Elects Reuther!, 25/27 March 1946
What to Do with Surplus Army Goods, 8 April 1946
Price “Bulge” Is a Breakthrough, 22 April 1946
For Price Control by Workers’ and Housewives’ Committees!, 29 April 1946
What a Real Workers’ Government Would Look Like in America, 29 April 1946
Price Control Up to Labor!, 13 May 1946
People Are Pawns in Big Power Wrangle at Paris, 20 May 1946
Of Special Interest to Women, 3 June 1946
Why Labor Needs a Party of Its Own, 3 June 1946
Leaders Duck Labor Party Issue, 17 June 1946
Congress Readies New Labor Blows, 24 June 1946
Ku Klux Klan Prepares Anti-Labor Violence, 24 June 1946
Nationalize the Food Industry! 1 July 1946
Both Boss Parties Share Blame for Price Debacle, 8 July 1946
The Fight for Socialism (book review), 22 July 1946
Rep. Celler, Supporter of Capitalism, Does Not Deserve Labor’s Vote, 29 July 1946
May-Garsson Steal Is a Small Part of War-Time Profiteering Scandal, 5 August 1946
A Powerful Indictment of Stalinism (book review), 5 August 1946
Behind Peron’s Victory in Argentina, 12 August 1946
Control Prices at Their Source! 12 August 1946
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Behind Peron’s Victory in Argentina (Part II), 19 August 1946
What Was Trotsky’s Goal in Russia? 26 August 1946
Bikini Atom Test Filmed as Spectacle; Navy Plays Down Threat to Mankind, 2 September 1946
Victory Certain as N.Y. Teamsters Strike Nears End, 23 September 1946
London Veterans Take Over Luxury Homes, 23 September 1946
Cost-Plus Pays Off for Profiteers, 7 October 1946
When Labor Downs Its Tools, No One Can Deny Its Power, 7 October 1946
America-Firsters Form New Reactionary Front, 21 October 1946
Meat Price Gouge Shows Need for Nationalization of Industry, 21 October 1946
Housewives Rebel Against High Meat Prices, 28 October 1946
How Can Women Attain a Full Creative Life?, 18 November 1946
Progressive Conference a Blind Alley for Labor, 25 November 1946
Truman-Landlords Plan Rent Raid on People, 25 November 1946
Women in the Socialist Cause, 2 December 1946
Modern Militarism Which “Arms the People Against Itself ...”, 27 January 1947
Pennies, Splinters Won’t Build Houses, 27 January 1947
‘Control’ Head Devises Rent-Lifting Scheme!, 3 February 1947
The Role of Women in U.S. Industry, 10 February 1947
Save the Rent Ceilings!, 10 February 1947
Expensive Ballyhoo About Price Drop Can’t Be Used to Buy Food or Clothing, 17 February 1947
A Review of the Film Sister Kenny, 17 February 1947
What Are the Issues in the Dispute over Lilienthal?, 24 February 1947
The Rich Get Another Windfall, 3 March 1947
Closed Shop, 10 March 1947
Tenants Must Act Now to Save Rent Control!, 10 March 1947
Seek “Compromise” Formula to Boost Rents, 17 March 1947
NLRB Jumps Ahead of Congress in “Amending” Wagner Act Regulations on Employers’ Behalf, 24 March 1947
Our Party Told the Truth About Imperialist War!, 7 April 1947
Offensive Indicated Against Wage Squeeze and Anti-Labor Bills, 7 April 1947
Depression Threat Stirs Annual Wage Demand, 14 April 1947
Price Boosts Cut Labor’s Purchasing Power, 14 April 1947
Telephone Workers Fight AT&T Monopoly’s “Public Service” Strike-Breaking Attempt, 21 April 1947
Is Submission “Labor Statesmanship”?, 28 April 1947
Hollywood Tries Something Different (film review), 5 May 1947
Chaplin’s Latest Productiont (film review), 19 May 1947
A Contribution to Discussion on the Workers’ Control Theory, 2 June 1947
Atomic Bomb and the Hollywood Mind, 9 June 1947
Giant Parade Proves Labor Is Ready to Fight, 10 June 1947
Karl Marx: Scientist and Man of Action, 5 January 1948
Army Retirement Is Racket for Officers, 12 January 1948
Truman Tax Plan Vote Bait for ’48, 26 January 1948
Green Copies NAM, Urges Longer Hours, 9 February 1948
Deportation Orders Threat to Liberties, 23 February 1948
Mr. Berle and the Liberal Credo, 1 March 1948
ADA Convention Exhibits Futility, 8 March 1948
Rent Control Office Aids Gougers, 15 March 1948
Where Was the Oil for Home Heating?, 29 March 1948
Fruits of Class Collaboration, 26 April 1948
Wages Far Below Minimum Standard, 10 May 1948
Housewives Can Help Labor Win Strikes, 17 May 1948
A Lesson in Arithmetic, 31 May 1948
Packinghouse – We Must Assess Strike’s Lessons, 7 June 1948
Record of 80th Congress Spells Labor Party Need, 28 June 1948
How The People Had Their “Choice” Picked, 5 July 1948
Tom Dewey: It’s Smart to Be Shifty, 12 July 1948
Prices, Highest in History, Are Going Higher, 19 July 1948
Issues in Discussion of Marshall Plan, 9 August 1948
Pulling Wool over Labor’s Eyes, 9 August 1948
Housewives Fight High Meat Prices, 23 August 1948
Southern “Liberal” Resents Exposure of Jim-Crow Facts, 11 October 1948
Food-Surplus Problem Looms Again, 18 October 1948
Cry, the Beloved Country (book review), 1 November 1948
Figures Don’t Lie, But ..., 8 November 1948
What Do People Think About the New Deal?, 29 November 1948
Report on Operation Dixie, 13 December 1948
NAM Reflects Profiteers’ Dilemma, 3 January 1949
New York’s “Divorce Mill” Scandal, 3 January 1949
The DP’s – New Bill in Congress Makes Some Amends, 24 January 1949
Lobbies Grease Congress Wheels, 24 January 1949
Quick Repeal of T-H Act Snagged on Delay Tactics in House, Senate, 31 January 1949
Bill Leaves Injunction Issue Open, 7 February 1949
Truman Claims Right to Injunction Power, 14 February 1949
Unemployment Jumps by One Million, 21 February 1949
South Asia Union and Western Union, 28 February 1949
Truman Tears into Republicans – While Dem Congress Does Nothing, 7 March 1949
Compromises Cripple Rent Control Bill, 21 March 1949
Filibuster Coalition Blocks Legislation, 21 March 1949
Landlord Lobby Wins Green Light for Rent-Gouge Bill in Congress, 28 March 1949
Congress Agrees on Legislation to Crack Rent Control, 4 April 1949
Congress Stalls on Taft-Hartley, 11 April 1949
Congress Bloc Turns Tame When It Comes to ERP, 18 April 1949
‘Swing a Vote for a Steak Dinner’, 25 April 1949
[One of] Two Criticisms – (letter), 25 April 1949
Truman Health Plan Joins Waiting Line – For Fast Freeze, 2 May 1949
House Passes Wood Bill, Then Kills It; Taft-Hartley Stays, 9 May 1949
Truman Dumping T-H Repeal, 30 May 1949
Dems Push Brannan Farm Program, 13 June 1949
Senate Government by Injunction Vote – Challenge to Labor, 18 July 1949
Steel Union Reps Prove Workers Have Not Shared in Record Profits, 29 August 1949
Issue in Steel Hearing – Profits vs. Needs, 5 September 1949
Rent Control Murder Case – Facts Point to the Guilty, 12 September 1949
Steel Union Retreat Weakens Fourth-Round CIO Wage Campaign, 19 September 1949
Steel Workers Face Hard Battle to Win Pensions, Other Demands, 20 September 1949
Why Big Steel Forced a Strike: Aims to Revive Taft-Hartleyism, 10 October 1949
Lewis Asks Joint Labor Fund to Aid Steel Strike, 24 October 1949
The World’s Children Are Starving!, 2 January 1950
Pro and Con on the Question of Rearming West Germany, 9 January 1950
Hollywood’s Four Films on the Negro Question (film review), 30 January 1950
[German Armament], 6 February 1950
Cold War Within Cold War – Struggle Over Markets Back Again, 6 March 1950
Cold-War ‘Prosperity’ – Army of Unemployed Is Near 5 Million, 3 April 1950
Who Killed the 32 on the L.I.R.R.?, 24 April 1950
Congressmen Worried about “Oligopolies” – Can’t Turn Clock Back to Small Business, 22 may 1950
Issues in Dispute, 6 July 1950
Archive maintained by Einde O’Callaghan.
Last updated on: 8 April 2024